Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (
alkaline phosphatase
)
47,916
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The minimum structural information necessary to formulate and assess mechanistic models of integral membrane protein function is that of membrane topology. This paper characterizes the topological structure of the melibiose carrier of Escherichia coli based on constraints provided by genetic fusions to the compartment-specific reporter protein
alkaline phosphatase
. Twenty-eight unique chimeras exhibiting either low
alkaline phosphatase
activity (cytoplasmic location of the fusion joint) or high
alkaline phosphatase
activity (periplasmic location of the fusion joint) were characterized and used in conjunction with Goldman-Engelman-Steitz hydropathy analysis to model topological structure. The melibiose carrier is predicted to have a cytoplasmic amino terminus, two sets of six transmembrane domains separated by an unusually large cytoplasmic loop ("six-loop-six" arrangement), and a 45-residue cytoplasmic carboxyl tail. Remarkably, the identical six-loop-six arrangement is predicted from the hydrophobicity plots of the H(+)-coupled
lactose
, arabinose, xylose, and citrate cotransporters of E. coli, the glucose transporter from rat brain, the family of glucose transporters isolated from various human tissues and cell lines, and the human, mouse, and hamster multidrug resistance transporters (Henderson, P.J.F. (1990) Res. Microbiol. 141, 316-328; Maloney, P.C. (1990) Res. Microbiol. 141, 374-383). Such a broad degree of conservation (or convergence) suggests a distinct structural and/or mechanistic advantage associated with the six-loop-six motif. The nature of this advantage is as yet unknown.
...
PMID:Membrane topology of the melibiose carrier of Escherichia coli. 173 Jul 19
The hypocalcemia that accompanies vitamin D deficiency is a major obstacle to proper interpretation of the role(s) of vitamin D metabolites in Ca-sensitive tissues. This paper describes the development and complete characterization of a dietary regimen with which normocalcemia was maintained in rats throughout the development of vitamin D deficiency. Normal weanling rats were fed diets containing 0.8% Ca, 0.5% P, and vitamin D3 (group A), or vitamin D-deficient diets containing 0.8% Ca and 0.5% P (group B); 2.0% Ca and 1.25% P (group C); or 2.0% Ca, 1.25% P, and 20%
lactose
(group D) for 19 wk. Group D rats were normocalcemic and normophosphatemic with normal parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels throughout the study. In contrast, from 4-19 diet wk, groups B and C were hypocalcemic with elevated PTH. Initially, plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 [25(OH)D3] levels decreased most rapidly, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 [1,25(OH)2D3] levels decreased least rapidly in group B rats, such that plasma 25(OH)D3 levels were reduced to 200-300 pg/ml before a decrease in 1,25(OH)2D3 levels was observed. However, vitamin D metabolite levels were similar in groups B, C, and D from 4-19 wk. Duodenal active Ca transport mirrored changes in plasma 1,25(OH)2D3 levels and was abolished after 10 wk. The results also suggested that vitamin D may not be necessary for normal bone mineralization since tibia mineral content and plasma
alkaline phosphatase
levels were similar in normocalcemic groups A and D throughout the study.
...
PMID:Plasma Ca influences vitamin D metabolite levels as rats develop vitamin D deficiency. 184 6
Two major subspecies of Staphylococcus cohnii, namely S. cohnii subsp. cohnii, from humans, and S. cohnii subsp. urealyticum, from humans and other primates, are described on the basis of a study of 14 to 25 strains and 18 to 33 strains, respectively. DNA-DNA hybridization studies conducted in our laboratory in 1983 (W. E. Kloos and J. F. Wolfshohl, Curr. Microbiol. 8:115-121, 1983) demonstrated that strains representing the different subspecies were significantly divergent. S. cohnii subsp. urealyticum can be distinguished from S. cohnii subsp. cohnii on the basis of its greater colony size; pigmentation; positive urease, beta-glucuronidase, and beta-galactosidase activities; delayed
alkaline phosphatase
activity; ability to produce acid aerobically from alpha-
lactose
; and fatty acid profile. The type strain of S. cohnii subsp. cohnii is ATCC 29974, the designated type strain of S. cohnii Schleifer and Kloos 1975b, 55. The type strain of S. cohnii subsp. urealyticum is ATCC 49330.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus cohnii subspecies: Staphylococcus cohnii subsp. cohnii subsp. nov. and Staphylococcus cohnii subsp. urealyticum subsp. nov. 185 41
The effects of salt (sodium chloride) supplementation of rat diets (80 g/kg diet), with or without
lactose
(150 g/kg), were studied in weanling rats over 14 d. Dietary salt increased water intake and reduced weight gain and food conversion efficiency, but these variables were unaffected by
lactose
. Salt-supplemented rats exhibited a three- to fivefold increase in urinary calcium excretion and a small increase in urinary magnesium and phosphorus excretion, irrespective of dietary
lactose
content. In addition, salt supplementation reduced plasma
alkaline phosphatase
(
EC 3.1.3.1
) activity. Lactose increased urinary Ca and Mg excretion and plasma Ca and P concentrations. Salt reduced tibia mass but not tibia mass expressed relative to body-weight, but neither variable was affected by
lactose
. Both tibia Mg content and concentration were reduced by salt but unaffected by
lactose
, and neither tibia P content nor concentration was affected by salt or
lactose
. Tibia Ca content was reduced by salt but this was prevented by
lactose
. Tibia Ca concentration was unaffected by salt or
lactose
, although there was a reduction (not significant) in tibia Ca concentration in animals fed on the
lactose
-free diet. These results show that
lactose
had no independent effect on bone and that reduced accretion of bone mass and mineral content in rats fed on the high-salt diets was due, at least in part, to reduced growth. Failure to offset sodium-induced hypercalciuria by a compensatory increase in net Ca absorption may have contributed to reduced bone Ca accretion. The protective effect of
lactose
against reduced bone Ca accretion may be due to increased Ca absorption.
...
PMID:Effect of dietary lactose on salt-mediated changes in mineral metabolism and bone composition in the rat. 193 8
The therapeutic value of three calcium absorption promoting carbohydrates,
lactose
, gluconate and xylitol, in bone calcification was evaluated in 7-week-old male rats which were fed on a semisynthetic Ca-deficient diet for 3 weeks. Lactose + CaCO3, xylitol + CaCO3, Ca-gluconate, or CaCO3 alone were administered to the Ca-deficient rats for 2 weeks; the carbohydrate and Ca contents of the diets were 5% and 0.5%, respectively. The Ca-deficient rats showed a decrease in serum total Ca and ionized Ca2+ and in tibial Ca, Mg, P and density, with a concomitant increase in bone hydroxyproline concentration. Bone and serum tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activities were increased 2-fold and the serum 1,25(OH)2D3 level 5-fold. Smaller increases were found in serum calcitonin, PTH,
alkaline phosphatase
and osteocalcin levels. These changes (except calcitonin) were reversed by the administration of Ca and the carbohydrates. It was observed that all three agents improved the recalcification of bones compared with the effect of CaCO3 alone. The effect of
lactose
and xylitol was superior to that of gluconate. These results suggest advantages in the use of xylitol in Ca-supplements.
...
PMID:Comparison of the effect of gluconate, lactose, and xylitol on bone recalcification in calcium-deficient rats. 207 37
A simple and sensitive chromogenic microtitre plate assay for glycoprotein enzymes is described, using melanoma tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) as a model enzyme. The assay is based on the binding of t-PA to immobilised lectin and quantitating the bound enzyme with plasminogen, fibrinogen fragments and chromogenic substrate S-2251 on an ELISA plate reader. Seven different lectins were examined for the binding of t-PA, and of these, concanavalin A was chosen for subsequent studies. The specificity of this binding can be inhibited dose-dependently in the presence of D-mannose and methyl alpha-D-mannoside, but not by D-glucose and D-
lactose
. The lower limit of the sensitivity of this assay is about 0.5 IU/ml. Comparison of the dose-response curves indicates that the sensitivity of this assay method is very similar to that of bioimmunoassay using anti-t-PA IgG to capture the antigen. The applicability of this method to other glycoprotein enzymes was also evaluated using
alkaline phosphatase
from bovine mucosa. The specificity of this method was related to the choice of substrate and this was shown by analysis of a mixture of t-PA and
alkaline phosphatase
. It is suggested that this assay can be adapted for the analysis of complex glycoprotein mixtures with the appropriate choice of lectin and substrate.
...
PMID:Lectin affinity bioassay: an assay method for glycoprotein enzyme. 249 37
Milk samples (186) were obtained at various stages of lactation from 27 common brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula). Qualitative and quantitative changes in the milk carbohydrates during early and mid-lactation were similar to those previously seen in other marsupials; the principal carbohydrate was
lactose
early in lactation and higher oligosaccharides in mid-lactation, and the hexose concentration reached a peak during mid-lactation. However, the late-lactation milk was unusual in that the carbohydrate was mainly
lactose
and its concentration remained relatively high (3.5 to 5.5%). In contrast to earlier findings on the milk of the tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii), little or no nucleotide pyrophosphatase, beta-galactosidase and
alkaline phosphatase
activities were detected late in lactation.
...
PMID:Changes in milk carbohydrates during lactation in the common brushtail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula (Marsupialia:Phalangeridae). 256 94
This investigation was initiated as a consequence of several cases of diarrhea in a nursery ward for preterm babies in Nairobi, Kenya. Ten
lactose
-positive colonies were isolated from the stools of each of 30 neonates, regardless of whether they had diarrhea; 229 strains were identified as Escherichia coli and 65 strains were identified as Klebsiella pneumoniae. Six strains were lost during laboratory handling. No other bacterial, viral, or parasitic enteropathogens were identified. Using synthetic
alkaline phosphatase
-labeled probes, the bacterial isolates were found to be negative for the presence of genes coding for heat-stable and heat-labile enterotoxins. Seventy-eight E. coli strains isolated from a total of 13 neonates possessed the E. coli enteropathogenic adhesion factor (EAF) gene, as demonstrated by the use of a cloned radiolabeled DNA fragment probe. These strains possessed similar plasmid profiles constituting a core plasmid profile, and while all adhered to HeLa cells, none produced Vero cell cytotoxins. The EAF gene was located on a 65-megadalton plasmid. Serotyping showed the strains to be of serogroup O111 and serotype H nontypable, a well known enteropathogenic type. Five neonates died during the outbreak, and the fatality rate was 30.7% (4 of 13) for neonates infected with EAF-positive E. coli strains compared with 7.7% (1 of 13) for neonates from whom only EAF-negative E. coli strains were isolated. K. pneumoniae only was isolated from five neonates.
...
PMID:Enteropathogenic Escherichia coli serotype O111:HNT isolated from preterm neonates in Nairobi, Kenya. 256 96
We compared sialidase (neuraminidase; EC 3.2.1.18) from Vibrio cholerae, Clostridium perfringens, and Arthrobacter ureafaciens, seeking to improve the electrophoretic separation of the liver and bone isoenzymes of
alkaline phosphatase
(
EC 3.1.3.1
) on cellulose acetate membranes. Resolution is decisively determined by the type and activity of sialidase used in the preincubation of serum sample. Sialidase from Arthrobacter ureafaciens is not suited for this method. For optimal separation of the two isoenzymes we recommend the use of sialidase from Vibrio cholerae, determination of its activity with a standard procedure such as described here (mucin or sialyl
lactose
as substrates), and a final concentration of sialidase activity of 2.0 or 2.9 U/L (measured with mucin or sialyl
lactose
) in the incubation mixture.
...
PMID:Sialidase from different sources compared for electrophoretically separating serum alkaline phosphatase fractions from liver and bone. 277 24
alpha-Lactalbumin was isolated from milk of M. eugenii and its concentration in milk samples taken at various times during lactation (0-40 weeks post partum) was determined by single radial immunodiffusion using rabbit antiserum to the purified protein. The alpha-lactalbumin concentration remained almost constant throughout lactation even though the concentration of total
lactose
(free
lactose
plus
lactose
contained in oligosaccharides) fell to zero after 34 weeks post partum. This fall in
lactose
was accompanied by a rise in the free galactose and glucose concentrations and marked increases in UDP-galactose hydrolase, nucleotide pyrophosphatase,
alkaline phosphatase
and acid beta-galactosidase activities. It is suggested that the in vitro hydrolysis of UDP-galactose was due to nucleotide pyrophosphatase and that this enzyme may also play a role in vivo late in lactation by making UDP-galactose unavailable for the synthesis of
lactose
. Alternatively,
lactose
and
lactose
-containing oligosaccharides might be degraded by the acid beta-galactosidase during or after secretion.
...
PMID:Changes in alpha-lactalbumin, total lactose, UDP-galactose hydrolase and other factors in tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii) milk during lactation. 285 90
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